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Title: Religion, Work-Family Gender Ideology, and Fertility
Resulting in 1 citation.
1. Pearce, Lisa D.
Davis, Shannon N.
Religion, Work-Family Gender Ideology, and Fertility
Presented: Los Angeles, CA, Population Association of America (PAA) Annual Meetings, March-April 2006
Cohort(s): NLSY79
Publisher: Population Association of America
Keyword(s): Childbearing, Premarital/Nonmarital; Family Formation; Fertility; Gender Differences; Religion; Religious Influences

Permission to reprint the abstract has not been received from the publisher.

Given evidence suggesting (1) that religiosity and work-family gender ideology are related to childbearing; and (2) variance in religious institutions' promotion of gendered patterns of family organization, this paper explores whether work-family gender ideology is a mechanism through which religious affiliation and/or practice influences childbearing. Using NLSY79 data, we evaluate how childhood religious affiliation, adult religious service attendance, and attitudes towards gendered family roles relate to the hazard of first premarital and marital births. We find that work-family gender ideologies somewhat mediate the elevated risk of a premarital birth for those raised Evangelical Protestant but not the negative relationship between religious service attendance and the risk of a premarital birth. Work-family gender ideology is negatively related to timing of first marital birth and does not mediate observed religion-fertility relationships. Our findings further elucidate relationships between religion and family formation and how attitudes toward gendered family organization might factor in the process.
Bibliography Citation
Pearce, Lisa D. and Shannon N. Davis. "Religion, Work-Family Gender Ideology, and Fertility." Presented: Los Angeles, CA, Population Association of America (PAA) Annual Meetings, March-April 2006.